conduit-combinators-0.3.0.1: Commonly used conduit functions, for both chunked and unchunked data

Safe HaskellNone
LanguageHaskell98

Data.Conduit.Combinators

Contents

Description

This module is meant as a replacement for Data.Conduit.List. That module follows a naming scheme which was originally inspired by its enumerator roots. This module is meant to introduce a naming scheme which encourages conduit best practices.

There are two versions of functions in this module. Those with a trailing E work in the individual elements of a chunk of data, e.g., the bytes of a ByteString, the Chars of a Text, or the Ints of a Vector Int. Those without a trailing E work on unchunked streams.

FIXME: discuss overall naming, usage of mono-traversable, etc

Mention take (Conduit) vs drop (Consumer)

Synopsis

Producers

Pure

yieldMany :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable mono) => mono -> Producer m (Element mono) Source

Yield each of the values contained by the given MonoFoldable.

This will work on many data structures, including lists, ByteStrings, and Vectors.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

unfold :: Monad m => (b -> Maybe (a, b)) -> b -> Producer m a Source

Generate a producer from a seed value.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

enumFromTo :: (Monad m, Enum a, Ord a) => a -> a -> Producer m a Source

Enumerate from a value to a final value, inclusive, via succ.

This is generally more efficient than using Prelude's enumFromTo and combining with sourceList since this avoids any intermediate data structures.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

iterate :: Monad m => (a -> a) -> a -> Producer m a Source

Produces an infinite stream of repeated applications of f to x.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

repeat :: Monad m => a -> Producer m a Source

Produce an infinite stream consisting entirely of the given value.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

replicate :: Monad m => Int -> a -> Producer m a Source

Produce a finite stream consisting of n copies of the given value.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

sourceLazy :: (Monad m, LazySequence lazy strict) => lazy -> Producer m strict Source

Generate a producer by yielding each of the strict chunks in a LazySequence.

For more information, see toChunks.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

Monadic

repeatM :: Monad m => m a -> Producer m a Source

Repeatedly run the given action and yield all values it produces.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

repeatWhileM :: Monad m => m a -> (a -> Bool) -> Producer m a Source

Repeatedly run the given action and yield all values it produces, until the provided predicate returns False.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

replicateM :: Monad m => Int -> m a -> Producer m a Source

Perform the given action n times, yielding each result.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

I/O

sourceFile :: (MonadResource m, IOData a) => FilePath -> Producer m a Source

Read all data from the given file.

This function automatically opens and closes the file handle, and ensures exception safety via MonadResource. It works for all instances of IOData, including ByteString and Text@.

Since 1.0.0

sourceHandle :: (MonadIO m, IOData a) => Handle -> Producer m a Source

Read all data from the given Handle.

Does not close the Handle at any point.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

sourceIOHandle :: (MonadResource m, IOData a) => IO Handle -> Producer m a Source

Open a Handle using the given function and stream data from it.

Automatically closes the file at completion.

Since 1.0.0

stdin :: (MonadIO m, IOData a) => Producer m a Source

sourceHandle applied to stdin.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

Random numbers

sourceRandom :: (Variate a, MonadIO m) => Producer m a Source

Create an infinite stream of random values, seeding from the system random number.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

sourceRandomN Source

Arguments

:: (Variate a, MonadIO m) 
=> Int

count

-> Producer m a 

Create a stream of random values of length n, seeding from the system random number.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

sourceRandomGen :: (Variate a, MonadBase base m, PrimMonad base) => Gen (PrimState base) -> Producer m a Source

Create an infinite stream of random values, using the given random number generator.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

sourceRandomNGen Source

Arguments

:: (Variate a, MonadBase base m, PrimMonad base) 
=> Gen (PrimState base) 
-> Int

count

-> Producer m a 

Create a stream of random values of length n, seeding from the system random number.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

Filesystem

sourceDirectory :: MonadResource m => FilePath -> Producer m FilePath Source

Stream the contents of the given directory, without traversing deeply.

This function will return all of the contents of the directory, whether they be files, directories, etc.

Note that the generated filepaths will be the complete path, not just the filename. In other words, if you have a directory foo containing files bar and baz, and you use sourceDirectory on foo, the results will be foo/bar and foo/baz.

Since 1.0.0

sourceDirectoryDeep Source

Arguments

:: MonadResource m 
=> Bool

Follow directory symlinks

-> FilePath

Root directory

-> Producer m FilePath 

Deeply stream the contents of the given directory.

This works the same as sourceDirectory, but will not return directories at all. This function also takes an extra parameter to indicate whether symlinks will be followed.

Since 1.0.0

Consumers

Pure

drop :: Monad m => Int -> Consumer a m () Source

Ignore a certain number of values in the stream.

Since 1.0.0

dropE :: (Monad m, IsSequence seq) => Index seq -> Consumer seq m () Source

Drop a certain number of elements from a chunked stream.

Since 1.0.0

dropWhile :: Monad m => (a -> Bool) -> Consumer a m () Source

Drop all values which match the given predicate.

Since 1.0.0

dropWhileE :: (Monad m, IsSequence seq) => (Element seq -> Bool) -> Consumer seq m () Source

Drop all elements in the chunked stream which match the given predicate.

Since 1.0.0

fold :: (Monad m, Monoid a) => Consumer a m a Source

Monoidally combine all values in the stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

foldE :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable mono, Monoid (Element mono)) => Consumer mono m (Element mono) Source

Monoidally combine all elements in the chunked stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

foldl :: Monad m => (a -> b -> a) -> a -> Consumer b m a Source

A strict left fold.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

foldl1 :: Monad m => (a -> a -> a) -> Consumer a m (Maybe a) Source

A strict left fold with no starting value. Returns Nothing when the stream is empty.

Subject to fusion

foldlE :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable mono) => (a -> Element mono -> a) -> a -> Consumer mono m a Source

A strict left fold on a chunked stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

foldMap :: (Monad m, Monoid b) => (a -> b) -> Consumer a m b Source

Apply the provided mapping function and monoidal combine all values.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

foldMapE :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable mono, Monoid w) => (Element mono -> w) -> Consumer mono m w Source

Apply the provided mapping function and monoidal combine all elements of the chunked stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

all :: Monad m => (a -> Bool) -> Consumer a m Bool Source

Check that all values in the stream return True.

Subject to shortcut logic: at the first False, consumption of the stream will stop.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

allE :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable mono) => (Element mono -> Bool) -> Consumer mono m Bool Source

Check that all elements in the chunked stream return True.

Subject to shortcut logic: at the first False, consumption of the stream will stop.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

any :: Monad m => (a -> Bool) -> Consumer a m Bool Source

Check that at least one value in the stream returns True.

Subject to shortcut logic: at the first True, consumption of the stream will stop.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

anyE :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable mono) => (Element mono -> Bool) -> Consumer mono m Bool Source

Check that at least one element in the chunked stream returns True.

Subject to shortcut logic: at the first True, consumption of the stream will stop.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

and :: Monad m => Consumer Bool m Bool Source

Are all values in the stream True?

Consumption stops once the first False is encountered.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

andE :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable mono, Element mono ~ Bool) => Consumer mono m Bool Source

Are all elements in the chunked stream True?

Consumption stops once the first False is encountered.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

or :: Monad m => Consumer Bool m Bool Source

Are any values in the stream True?

Consumption stops once the first True is encountered.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

orE :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable mono, Element mono ~ Bool) => Consumer mono m Bool Source

Are any elements in the chunked stream True?

Consumption stops once the first True is encountered.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

elem :: (Monad m, Eq a) => a -> Consumer a m Bool Source

Are any values in the stream equal to the given value?

Stops consuming as soon as a match is found.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

elemE :: (Monad m, EqSequence seq) => Element seq -> Consumer seq m Bool Source

Are any elements in the chunked stream equal to the given element?

Stops consuming as soon as a match is found.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

notElem :: (Monad m, Eq a) => a -> Consumer a m Bool Source

Are no values in the stream equal to the given value?

Stops consuming as soon as a match is found.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

notElemE :: (Monad m, EqSequence seq) => Element seq -> Consumer seq m Bool Source

Are no elements in the chunked stream equal to the given element?

Stops consuming as soon as a match is found.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

sinkLazy :: (Monad m, LazySequence lazy strict) => Consumer strict m lazy Source

Consume all incoming strict chunks into a lazy sequence. Note that the entirety of the sequence will be resident at memory.

This can be used to consume a stream of strict ByteStrings into a lazy ByteString, for example.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

sinkList :: Monad m => Consumer a m [a] Source

Consume all values from the stream and return as a list. Note that this will pull all values into memory.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

sinkVector :: (MonadBase base m, Vector v a, PrimMonad base) => Consumer a m (v a) Source

Sink incoming values into a vector, growing the vector as necessary to fit more elements.

Note that using this function is more memory efficient than sinkList and then converting to a Vector, as it avoids intermediate list constructors.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

sinkVectorN Source

Arguments

:: (MonadBase base m, Vector v a, PrimMonad base) 
=> Int

maximum allowed size

-> Consumer a m (v a) 

Sink incoming values into a vector, up until size maxSize. Subsequent values will be left in the stream. If there are less than maxSize values present, returns a Vector of smaller size.

Note that using this function is more memory efficient than sinkList and then converting to a Vector, as it avoids intermediate list constructors.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

sinkBuilder :: (Monad m, Monoid builder, ToBuilder a builder) => Consumer a m builder Source

Convert incoming values to a builder and fold together all builder values.

Defined as: foldMap toBuilder.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

sinkLazyBuilder :: (Monad m, Monoid builder, ToBuilder a builder, Builder builder lazy) => Consumer a m lazy Source

Same as sinkBuilder, but afterwards convert the builder to its lazy representation.

Alternatively, this could be considered an alternative to sinkLazy, with the following differences:

  • This function will allow multiple input types, not just the strict version of the lazy structure.
  • Some buffer copying may occur in this version.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

sinkNull :: Monad m => Consumer a m () Source

Consume and discard all remaining values in the stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

awaitNonNull :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable a) => Consumer a m (Maybe (NonNull a)) Source

Same as await, but discards any leading onull values.

Since 1.0.0

headE :: (Monad m, IsSequence seq) => Consumer seq m (Maybe (Element seq)) Source

Get the next element in the chunked stream.

Since 1.0.0

peek :: Monad m => Consumer a m (Maybe a) Source

View the next value in the stream without consuming it.

Since 1.0.0

peekE :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable mono) => Consumer mono m (Maybe (Element mono)) Source

View the next element in the chunked stream without consuming it.

Since 1.0.0

last :: Monad m => Consumer a m (Maybe a) Source

Retrieve the last value in the stream, if present.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

lastE :: (Monad m, IsSequence seq) => Consumer seq m (Maybe (Element seq)) Source

Retrieve the last element in the chunked stream, if present.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

length :: (Monad m, Num len) => Consumer a m len Source

Count how many values are in the stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

lengthE :: (Monad m, Num len, MonoFoldable mono) => Consumer mono m len Source

Count how many elements are in the chunked stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

lengthIf :: (Monad m, Num len) => (a -> Bool) -> Consumer a m len Source

Count how many values in the stream pass the given predicate.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

lengthIfE :: (Monad m, Num len, MonoFoldable mono) => (Element mono -> Bool) -> Consumer mono m len Source

Count how many elements in the chunked stream pass the given predicate.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

maximum :: (Monad m, Ord a) => Consumer a m (Maybe a) Source

Get the largest value in the stream, if present.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

maximumE :: (Monad m, OrdSequence seq) => Consumer seq m (Maybe (Element seq)) Source

Get the largest element in the chunked stream, if present.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

minimum :: (Monad m, Ord a) => Consumer a m (Maybe a) Source

Get the smallest value in the stream, if present.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

minimumE :: (Monad m, OrdSequence seq) => Consumer seq m (Maybe (Element seq)) Source

Get the smallest element in the chunked stream, if present.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

null :: Monad m => Consumer a m Bool Source

True if there are no values in the stream.

This function does not modify the stream.

Since 1.0.0

nullE :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable mono) => Consumer mono m Bool Source

True if there are no elements in the chunked stream.

This function may remove empty leading chunks from the stream, but otherwise will not modify it.

Since 1.0.0

sum :: (Monad m, Num a) => Consumer a m a Source

Get the sum of all values in the stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

sumE :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable mono, Num (Element mono)) => Consumer mono m (Element mono) Source

Get the sum of all elements in the chunked stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

product :: (Monad m, Num a) => Consumer a m a Source

Get the product of all values in the stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

productE :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable mono, Num (Element mono)) => Consumer mono m (Element mono) Source

Get the product of all elements in the chunked stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

find :: Monad m => (a -> Bool) -> Consumer a m (Maybe a) Source

Find the first matching value.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

Monadic

mapM_ :: Monad m => (a -> m ()) -> Consumer a m () Source

Apply the action to all values in the stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

mapM_E :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable mono) => (Element mono -> m ()) -> Consumer mono m () Source

Apply the action to all elements in the chunked stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

foldM :: Monad m => (a -> b -> m a) -> a -> Consumer b m a Source

A monadic strict left fold.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

foldME :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable mono) => (a -> Element mono -> m a) -> a -> Consumer mono m a Source

A monadic strict left fold on a chunked stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

foldMapM :: (Monad m, Monoid w) => (a -> m w) -> Consumer a m w Source

Apply the provided monadic mapping function and monoidal combine all values.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

foldMapME :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable mono, Monoid w) => (Element mono -> m w) -> Consumer mono m w Source

Apply the provided monadic mapping function and monoidal combine all elements in the chunked stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

I/O

sinkFile :: (MonadResource m, IOData a) => FilePath -> Consumer a m () Source

Write all data to the given file.

This function automatically opens and closes the file handle, and ensures exception safety via MonadResource. It works for all instances of IOData, including ByteString and Text@.

Since 1.0.0

sinkHandle :: (MonadIO m, IOData a) => Handle -> Consumer a m () Source

Write all data to the given Handle.

Does not close the Handle at any point.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

sinkIOHandle :: (MonadResource m, IOData a) => IO Handle -> Consumer a m () Source

Open a Handle using the given function and stream data to it.

Automatically closes the file at completion.

Since 1.0.0

print :: (Show a, MonadIO m) => Consumer a m () Source

Print all incoming values to stdout.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

stdout :: (MonadIO m, IOData a) => Consumer a m () Source

sinkHandle applied to stdout.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

stderr :: (MonadIO m, IOData a) => Consumer a m () Source

sinkHandle applied to stderr.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

Transformers

Pure

map :: Monad m => (a -> b) -> Conduit a m b Source

Apply a transformation to all values in a stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

mapE :: (Monad m, Functor f) => (a -> b) -> Conduit (f a) m (f b) Source

Apply a transformation to all elements in a chunked stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

omapE :: (Monad m, MonoFunctor mono) => (Element mono -> Element mono) -> Conduit mono m mono Source

Apply a monomorphic transformation to all elements in a chunked stream.

Unlike mapE, this will work on types like ByteString and Text which are MonoFunctor but not Functor.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

concatMap :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable mono) => (a -> mono) -> Conduit a m (Element mono) Source

Apply the function to each value in the stream, resulting in a foldable value (e.g., a list). Then yield each of the individual values in that foldable value separately.

Generalizes concatMap, mapMaybe, and mapFoldable.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

concatMapE :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable mono, Monoid w) => (Element mono -> w) -> Conduit mono m w Source

Apply the function to each element in the chunked stream, resulting in a foldable value (e.g., a list). Then yield each of the individual values in that foldable value separately.

Generalizes concatMap, mapMaybe, and mapFoldable.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

take :: Monad m => Int -> Conduit a m a Source

Stream up to n number of values downstream.

Note that, if downstream terminates early, not all values will be consumed. If you want to force exactly the given number of values to be consumed, see takeExactly.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

takeE :: (Monad m, IsSequence seq) => Index seq -> Conduit seq m seq Source

Stream up to n number of elements downstream in a chunked stream.

Note that, if downstream terminates early, not all values will be consumed. If you want to force exactly the given number of values to be consumed, see takeExactlyE.

Since 1.0.0

takeWhile :: Monad m => (a -> Bool) -> Conduit a m a Source

Stream all values downstream that match the given predicate.

Same caveats regarding downstream termination apply as with take.

Since 1.0.0

takeWhileE :: (Monad m, IsSequence seq) => (Element seq -> Bool) -> Conduit seq m seq Source

Stream all elements downstream that match the given predicate in a chunked stream.

Same caveats regarding downstream termination apply as with takeE.

Since 1.0.0

takeExactly :: Monad m => Int -> ConduitM a b m r -> ConduitM a b m r Source

Consume precisely the given number of values and feed them downstream.

This function is in contrast to take, which will only consume up to the given number of values, and will terminate early if downstream terminates early. This function will discard any additional values in the stream if they are unconsumed.

Note that this function takes a downstream ConduitM as a parameter, as opposed to working with normal fusion. For more information, see http://www.yesodweb.com/blog/2013/10/core-flaw-pipes-conduit, the section titled "pipes and conduit: isolate".

Since 1.0.0

takeExactlyE :: (Monad m, IsSequence a) => Index a -> ConduitM a b m r -> ConduitM a b m r Source

Same as takeExactly, but for chunked streams.

Since 1.0.0

concat :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable mono) => Conduit mono m (Element mono) Source

Flatten out a stream by yielding the values contained in an incoming MonoFoldable as individually yielded values.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

filter :: Monad m => (a -> Bool) -> Conduit a m a Source

Keep only values in the stream passing a given predicate.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

filterE :: (IsSequence seq, Monad m) => (Element seq -> Bool) -> Conduit seq m seq Source

Keep only elements in the chunked stream passing a given predicate.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

mapWhile :: Monad m => (a -> Maybe b) -> Conduit a m b Source

Map values as long as the result is Just.

Since 1.0.0

conduitVector Source

Arguments

:: (MonadBase base m, Vector v a, PrimMonad base) 
=> Int

maximum allowed size

-> Conduit a m (v a) 

Break up a stream of values into vectors of size n. The final vector may be smaller than n if the total number of values is not a strict multiple of n. No empty vectors will be yielded.

Since 1.0.0

scanl :: Monad m => (a -> b -> a) -> a -> Conduit b m a Source

Analog of scanl for lists.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.6

concatMapAccum :: Monad m => (a -> accum -> (accum, [b])) -> accum -> Conduit a m b Source

concatMap with an accumulator.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

intersperse :: Monad m => a -> Conduit a m a Source

Insert the given value between each two values in the stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

slidingWindow :: (Monad m, IsSequence seq, Element seq ~ a) => Int -> Conduit a m seq Source

Sliding window of values 1,2,3,4,5 with window size 2 gives [1,2],[2,3],[3,4],[4,5]

Best used with structures that support O(1) snoc.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

Binary base encoding

encodeBase64 :: Monad m => Conduit ByteString m ByteString Source

Apply base64-encoding to the stream.

Since 1.0.0

decodeBase64 :: Monad m => Conduit ByteString m ByteString Source

Apply base64-decoding to the stream. Will stop decoding on the first invalid chunk.

Since 1.0.0

encodeBase64URL :: Monad m => Conduit ByteString m ByteString Source

Apply URL-encoding to the stream.

Since 1.0.0

decodeBase64URL :: Monad m => Conduit ByteString m ByteString Source

Apply lenient base64URL-decoding to the stream. Will stop decoding on the first invalid chunk.

Since 1.0.0

encodeBase16 :: Monad m => Conduit ByteString m ByteString Source

Apply base16-encoding to the stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

decodeBase16 :: Monad m => Conduit ByteString m ByteString Source

Apply base16-decoding to the stream. Will stop decoding on the first invalid chunk.

Since 1.0.0

Monadic

mapM :: Monad m => (a -> m b) -> Conduit a m b Source

Apply a monadic transformation to all values in a stream.

If you do not need the transformed values, and instead just want the monadic side-effects of running the action, see mapM_.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

mapME :: (Monad m, Traversable f) => (a -> m b) -> Conduit (f a) m (f b) Source

Apply a monadic transformation to all elements in a chunked stream.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

omapME :: (Monad m, MonoTraversable mono) => (Element mono -> m (Element mono)) -> Conduit mono m mono Source

Apply a monadic monomorphic transformation to all elements in a chunked stream.

Unlike mapME, this will work on types like ByteString and Text which are MonoFunctor but not Functor.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

concatMapM :: (Monad m, MonoFoldable mono) => (a -> m mono) -> Conduit a m (Element mono) Source

Apply the monadic function to each value in the stream, resulting in a foldable value (e.g., a list). Then yield each of the individual values in that foldable value separately.

Generalizes concatMapM, mapMaybeM, and mapFoldableM.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

filterM :: Monad m => (a -> m Bool) -> Conduit a m a Source

Keep only values in the stream passing a given monadic predicate.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

filterME :: (Monad m, IsSequence seq) => (Element seq -> m Bool) -> Conduit seq m seq Source

Keep only elements in the chunked stream passing a given monadic predicate.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

iterM :: Monad m => (a -> m ()) -> Conduit a m a Source

Apply a monadic action on all values in a stream.

This Conduit can be used to perform a monadic side-effect for every value, whilst passing the value through the Conduit as-is.

iterM f = mapM (\a -> f a >>= \() -> return a)

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

scanlM :: Monad m => (a -> b -> m a) -> a -> Conduit b m a Source

Analog of scanl for lists, monadic.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.6

concatMapAccumM :: Monad m => (a -> accum -> m (accum, [b])) -> accum -> Conduit a m b Source

concatMapM with an accumulator.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

Textual

encodeUtf8 :: (Monad m, Utf8 text binary) => Conduit text m binary Source

Encode a stream of text as UTF8.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

decodeUtf8 :: MonadThrow m => Conduit ByteString m Text Source

Decode a stream of binary data as UTF8.

Since 1.0.0

decodeUtf8Lenient :: MonadThrow m => Conduit ByteString m Text Source

Decode a stream of binary data as UTF8, replacing any invalid bytes with the Unicode replacement character.

Since 1.0.0

line :: (Monad m, IsSequence seq, Element seq ~ Char) => ConduitM seq o m r -> ConduitM seq o m r Source

Stream in the entirety of a single line.

Like takeExactly, this will consume the entirety of the line regardless of the behavior of the inner Conduit.

Since 1.0.0

lineAscii :: (Monad m, IsSequence seq, Element seq ~ Word8) => ConduitM seq o m r -> ConduitM seq o m r Source

Same as line, but operates on ASCII/binary data.

Since 1.0.0

unlines :: (Monad m, IsSequence seq, Element seq ~ Char) => Conduit seq m seq Source

Insert a newline character after each incoming chunk of data.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

unlinesAscii :: (Monad m, IsSequence seq, Element seq ~ Word8) => Conduit seq m seq Source

Same as unlines, but operates on ASCII/binary data.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

takeExactlyUntilE :: (Monad m, IsSequence seq) => (Element seq -> Bool) -> ConduitM seq o m r -> ConduitM seq o m r Source

Stream in the chunked input until an element matches a predicate.

Like takeExactly, this will consume the entirety of the prefix regardless of the behavior of the inner Conduit.

linesUnbounded :: (Monad m, IsSequence seq, Element seq ~ Char) => Conduit seq m seq Source

Convert a stream of arbitrarily-chunked textual data into a stream of data where each chunk represents a single line. Note that, if you have unknownuntrusted input, this function is unsafe/, since it would allow an attacker to form lines of massive length and exhaust memory.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

linesUnboundedAscii :: (Monad m, IsSequence seq, Element seq ~ Word8) => Conduit seq m seq Source

Same as linesUnbounded, but for ASCII/binary data.

Subject to fusion

Since 1.0.0

splitOnUnboundedE :: (Monad m, IsSequence seq) => (Element seq -> Bool) -> Conduit seq m seq Source

Split a stream of arbitrarily-chunked data, based on a predicate on elements. Elements that satisfy the predicate will cause chunks to be split, and aren't included in these output chunks. Note that, if you have unknown/untrusted input, this function is unsafe, since it would allow an attacker to form chunks of massive length and exhaust memory.

Special

vectorBuilder Source

Arguments

:: (PrimMonad base, MonadBase base m, Vector v e, MonadBase base n) 
=> Int

size

-> ((e -> n ()) -> Sink i m r) 
-> ConduitM i (v e) m r 

Generally speaking, yielding values from inside a Conduit requires some allocation for constructors. This can introduce an overhead, similar to the overhead needed to represent a list of values instead of a vector. This overhead is even more severe when talking about unboxed values.

This combinator allows you to overcome this overhead, and efficiently fill up vectors. It takes two parameters. The first is the size of each mutable vector to be allocated. The second is a function. The function takes an argument which will yield the next value into a mutable vector.

Under the surface, this function uses a number of tricks to get high performance. For more information on both usage and implementation, please see: https://www.fpcomplete.com/user/snoyberg/library-documentation/vectorbuilder

Since 1.0.0